Background

Data are presented on the general population epidemiology of DSM-III-R bipolar I disorder in the United States.

Methods

Data come from the US National Comorbidity Survey (NCS), a general population survey of DSM-III-R disorders.

A modified version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview was used to make diagnoses.

Results

A small (N=59) clinical reappraisal study showed that the only manic symptom profile that could validly be assessed with the CIDI is characterized by euphoria, grandiosity and the ability to maintain energy without sleep, which described approximately half of all clinically validated bipolar I cases in the NCS.

Further analysis focused on this symptom profile, which involved N=29 cases in the total sample.

Lifetime prevalence was estimated to be 0.4% and 12-month prevalence only slightly lower.

Caseness was negatively related to income, education and age, positively related to urbanicity, and elevated among the previously married, never married and non-whites.

All cases reported at least one other NCS/DSM-III-R disorder and 59.3% reported that their episode of bipolar disorder (either mania or depression) occurred at a later age than at least one other NCS/DSM-III-R disorder.

Although 93.2% of lifetime cases reported some lifetime treatment, only 44.7% of recent cases were in treatment.